Caught red feathered: infection from cockatoo to human and mice reveals genetic plasticity of Cryptococcus neoformans during mammalian passage.
Dorrian G CohenRebecca A WingertPublished in: Tissue barriers (2024)
The fungus Cryptococcus neoformans is pervasive in our environment and causes the infectious disease cryptococcosis in humans, most commonly in immunocompromised patients. In addition to corroborating the avian origins of a case of cryptococcosis in an immunocompromised patient in 2000, a fascinating recent report has now characterized the genetic and phenotypic changes that occur in this C. neoformans during passage in mammalian hosts. Interestingly, mouse-passaged isolates showed differences in virulence factors ranging from capsule size, melanization, nonlytic macrophage exocytosis, and amoeba predation resistance as compared to the patient strain. Taken together, these results provide new insights about the relationship between mutations acquired during an infection and changes in virulence.
Keyphrases
- escherichia coli
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- infectious diseases
- end stage renal disease
- staphylococcus aureus
- case report
- endothelial cells
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- biofilm formation
- chronic kidney disease
- genome wide
- antimicrobial resistance
- prognostic factors
- adipose tissue
- type diabetes
- patient reported outcomes
- cystic fibrosis
- respiratory failure
- high fat diet induced
- patient reported
- disease virus